Atlantic tuna species threatened by record levels of overfishing and alleged criminal activities: WWF urges ICCAT to deliver stringent action

Posted on

09 November 2018

Dubrovnik, Croatia - A €12 million annual trade in illegal bluefin tuna recently uncovered in the Mediterranean and the dramatic overfishing of tropical tunas, pushing populations at risk of collapse, underline the need for serious action by the EU and tuna fishing nations at the ICCAT meeting in Croatia, starting on Monday 12 November. WWF urges the EU and other fishing nations to put in place stringent controls and sanctions against fraudulent companies to dismantle illegal trade before deciding on any future fishing quota increase. Failure to do this, or changes in the current plan, could threaten the recovery of tuna species.

“The fact that tonnes of unreported bluefin tuna could have been smuggled for years across EU borders is simply unacceptable. The EU and all fishing nations must close the loopholes of our control and monitoring systems and start cracking down on criminals by blacklisting vessels, withdrawing fishing and farming licenses and imposing effective sanctions. Any increase in fishing quotas or changes in the recovery plan must be put on hold until we have a full record of the tuna that is really caught from the sea,” said Alessandro Buzzi, Bluefin Tuna Regional Manager, WWF Mediterranean Marine Initiative.

WWF is also seriously concerned about the high level of overfishing of tropical tunas that risks collapsing the stock by 2033 according to scientists. In the last two years, catches of bigeye tuna were 20 per cent higher than what was agreed in the ICCAT recovery plan. Catch limits have also been regularly overshot for yellowfin tuna, threatening the health of the stock. In 2016, around 150,000 tonnes of yellowfin were caught, a level estimated to be 36 per cent above the legal quota.

WWF is also asking ICCAT for a stronger ban on shark finning, already put in place by other institutions including the EU, and that causes the death of millions of sharks every year. Deprived of their fins, sharks are discarded back to the sea, often still alive, but unable to swim effectively so they sink and die. In addition to this, in the Mediterranean, WWF is calling for strong management measures to avoid shark bycatch through measures including gear restrictions and fishing closures. WWF also believes ICCAT should ban the retention of North Atlantic shortfin mako shark and limit fishing quotas for blue sharks in line with scientific advice, to avoid overfishing.